Four Out Of Five Do Not Trust Companies With Personal Data - Four Out Of Five Do Not Trust Companies With Personal Data. Low levels of consumer trust in how businesses manage and secure customer data could put companies at risk, according to a study by Symantec. Nearly four out of five people in Britain believe their personal information is insecure in the hands of the companies that hold the data, according to a recent survey by Symantec Corp (Nasdaq: SYMC) and Moneysupermarket.com, the online price comparison site. The research was commissioned by Symantec to assess attitudes towards online risks from both a consumer and business perspective.
International Press Release Publishing for free in 15 languages across 22 countries
Press Releases

Four Out Of Five Do Not Trust Companies With Personal Data

2008/09/26 05:52

Press Release from:
Symantec
Four Out Of Five Do Not Trust Companies With Personal Data. Low levels of consumer trust in how businesses manage and secure customer data could put companies at risk, according to a study by Symantec. Nearly four out of five people in Britain believe their personal information is insecure in the hands of the companies that hold the data, according to a recent survey by Symantec Corp (Nasdaq: SYMC) and Moneysupermarket.com, the online price comparison site. The research was commissioned by Symantec to assess attitudes towards online risks from both a consumer and business perspective.  
Four Out Of Five Do Not Trust Companies With Personal Data

 
An even higher number, 89 per cent of respondents, believes that reckless or repeated data breaches should be a criminal matter and punishable by imprisonment, with four out of five people saying it should be a ‘one strike and you’re out’ rule when it comes to data loss. This low level of consumer trust could have a vast impact on the reputation and brand value of a company, when taking into account the response from businesses. Not only did the majority of companies polled (76 per cent) expect to lose customers if a data loss or breach occur, about half of them expected it to be immediate.  
 
“These statistics are very concerning for business, particularly in the current unstable market conditions,” said John Brigden, senior vice president for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Symantec. “Not only do they risk losing large numbers of customers following an incident of data loss, but almost 60 per cent of companies said it would be a lot harder to attract new customers once the reputation had been tarnished.” 
 
A further 75 per cent of consumers are concerned by how much information companies hold about them, whether online or offline, and a staggering 93 per cent will not provide personal details to a company which has past problems of losing data. When questioned on the trustworthiness of public companies, half of those polled rated the Government as the least trustworthy organisation.



Contact author of this article:
web: http://www.symantec.com/index.jsp
E-Mail: Contact author
 

Comments




Write comment
Heading Name
Your comment (max. 400 chars)
captchas

Enter the above code.
Social Bookmarking
Bookmark bei: Mr. Wong Bookmark bei: Webnews Bookmark bei: Folkd Bookmark bei: Yigg Bookmark bei: Digg Bookmark bei: Reddit Bookmark bei: Simpy Bookmark bei: Slashdot Bookmark bei: Netscape Bookmark bei: Google Bookmark bei: Blinklist Bookmark bei: Diigo Bookmark bei: Newsvine Bookmark bei: Ma.Gnolia Bookmark bei: Netvouz

zurück zur Kategorieseite: Computers / Security
This article was read 356 times


 
 

Pressreleases by authors
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z